The Parable of the Spectacles

“Why are you back?” The store-owner exclaimed when he saw Magico, the magic spectacles, back on his display shelf. He had just sold it to an odd couple — a pessimist and a dreamer. “Your new owners must be looking for you!”

Magico simply dropped his gaze.

The store owner’s brows creased. “What’s wrong, Magico? You look so sad. Did your new owners mistreat you?” he asked softly, opening the display cabinet. He took out the magic spectacles and made it sit on the glass top, facing him.

Magico shook his head. “No master,” he replied softly. Beads of tears were slowly forming around its framed eyes.

“I don’t know, Master. It just made me very sad. I thought it was sad that even with me on him, he still couldn’t see everything. He was only able to see the beautiful things, not the bad.

“So?”

“So,” Magico gestured helplessly, “it means he thinks he lives in a perfect world. Even with his sharpened vision, he still couldn’t see the troubles of this world. That means he never will. So he will never be able to address them.”

The master touched his chin with his right hand.

“Then,” continued Magico. “the pessimist put me on and exclaimed, ‘Moon? Captivating sunrise and sunset? Twinkling stars? My, you must be on to your pathetic dream again! I don’t see anything across the sky. All I see are the blackish clouds threatening to fall. And the flowers, the leaves… what’s so special about them? Can’t you see they will eventually wilt? Pathetic, that’s what life on earth is!”

“Oh, so they quarreled?” The master exclaimed. “Is that why you left them?”

“I don’t know if they quarreled, Master,” Magico shook his head. “I left them as soon as I heard them exclaim those things. I realized I’m of no use to them. Sure, I could make their visions clearer, I could sharpen their eyes, but I can never make them see the world as it really is. I can never widen their perspective nor inject understanding into them.”

//Sherma E. Benosa

24 July 2008; 11:30

_______________________________

Be-spectacled Me

My vision is now clearer. I now recognize faces even from afar. I am still adjusting with my improved vision, and with my little spatial disorientation. But I am hoping that in due time, I’ll get used to my additional eyes, unlike how I never got used to my spectacles the first time I was prescribed corrective eyeglasses in 2004. My vision then was -50/-75; now it’s -150/-200!

Unlike before, I now have to use my glasses all the time, and not just when I read. And this time, I really have to religiously do it, if I want to slow down the degradation of my vision. Ah, the price of stubbornness!

As I was walking to the taxi stand from the ‘eye center’, feeling a little dizzy, I told my self: “How nice it is to really see things as they are — their details, their colors.” And I wondered how I had managed to live during the past three years with my blurry vision (although it wasn’t as bad then as it is now).

As I walked, a thought hit me: will my improved vision also improve my perspective on things? The above is the answer to this thought. Please tell me what you think.

It can be unfashionable to see reality, rather than the dream created by the consumer market that we often live in. Talking with a fiend on the river bank this morning while walking our dogs, we had concerns about how marketeering has taken over the world of politics. It’s no longer good enough to say what you beilieve; politicians now have to ‘segment the market’ and ‘sell’ their ideas . . . . Where will it end? I’ve found a book which really looks at this aspect full in the face: it’s called “Affluenza” by Oliver James. I’m sure you’d find it really thought provoking.

My ‘bottom line’ is that I belive that we don’t believe we make the world a better place by behaving as if it’s other than it is.

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ABOUT ME

I am a brainteaser seeking answers to my questions, and attempting to put together the clues of — and find meaning to — the puzzle that is my life.
A proud owner of a crazy pen and a humble resident of the written world, I am a sojourner who travels through, and along, indefinable planes.
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